
Denmark is renowned for its outstanding designs. Most people have encountered Danish Design at some time or other, whether it’s Erik Magnussen’s Stelton thermos flask, Arne Jacobsen’s Ant Chair or Hans J. Wegner’s The Chair. Design lovers will revel in a visit to Denmark. Bredgade, Copenhagen – the design street par excellence – would be one good place to begin your tour. You will find the
Danish Museum of Art & Design at number 68. The “Utopia and Reality” section of the museum is well worth seeing, with its realisation of 20th-century Danish furniture design. The exhibition is based on the museum’s own collection, the largest in Denmark. You will follow the history of design from the avant-garde dream of a new and better world in the early 1900s, through to Børge Mogensen’s 1940s functionalist furniture for the people and on to the organic wave of the 1990s. Some rooms are dedicated to heavyweights such as Kaare Klint, Poul Henningsen, Arne Jacobsen and Verner Panton.
Royal Copenhagen has become almost synonymous with Danish Design. The porcelain factory, which dates from 1775, has a visitor centre at Søndre Fasanvej 9, Frederiksberg; please note that this will be relocating to Amagertorv in the autumn, though. Here, you can enjoy some history and take a look back at evergreens of porcelain such as the exclusive Flora Danica or the popular Blue Fluted dinner service, ever in demand.
The Danish Design Centre - housed in world-famous architect Henning Larsen’s high-tech building just opposite Tivoli – puts on a variety of special exhibitions. The basement passage has been transformed into a veritable treasure-trove of fantastic Danish and international designs including the Vipp waste bin, Lego bricks and B&O hi-fi. Posing here, too, is the world’s first chair to be made from a single piece of plastic, by Verner Panton – the enfant terrible of Danish design.

If you go to
Tivoli, be sure to have a look at Poul Henningsen’s garden lanterns. As one of the pioneers of Danish functionalism, PH gave form to the light and its practical, yet eminently elegant lampshade system. The nearly 2000 lanterns illuminate the amusement park at different points around the lake. The spiral-shaped shades are reminiscent of spinning-tops and the lamps were originally fitted with little motors so they could turn round.
PH’s familiar classics are suspended by and inside the Divan 2 restaurant. On your tour, it is also recommend taking in the lighting firm
Louis Poulsen’s Showroom, which presents PH together with other Danish lamp makers on 700 m2 in pleasant Gammel Strand.